Skip to the content | Change text size

Professor Jenny Hocking

BSc (Mon); BEc (Mon); PhD (Syd)

Contact details | Research interests | Research supervision | Publications

front cover of book with picture of Frank Hardy

Latest work

Frank Hardy: Politics, Literature, Life

This definitive political biography of the celebrated Australian writer and communist, Frank Hardy, explores the relationship between art and politics and presents new insights into one of the most important Australian writers of the twentieth century. Drawing on previously unpublished private papers and archival material, Hocking reveals for the first time the identity of the child of John Wren on whom the illegitimate child in Hardy’s explosive first novel Power Without Glory was based, and over which he was unsuccessfully prosecuted for criminal libel.Frank Hardy: Politics Literature Life was short-listed for the 2006 New South Wales Premier’s History Awards.

Professor Hocking is a well-known biographer and a highly regarded scholar and commentator on Australian politics, counter-terrorism and security matters. Jenny has written extensively in these fields and her work has appeared in scholarly journals, newspapers, radio and television. She is a regular commentator on Australian politics and security matters in Australian media and for Radio Netherlands, and contributed the entries on Gough Whitlam and Lionel Murphy to the Oxford Companion to Australian Politics. Jenny is the author of two award-winning political biographies, Lionel Murphy: a Political Biography (Cambridge University Press. 1997, 2000) and Frank Hardy: Politics Literature Life (Lothian Books. 2005). She has also written extensively on counter-terrorism and democracy most recently in Terror Laws: ASIO, Counter-terrorism and the Threat to Democracy (UNSW Press. 2004). She is a member of the Executive Board of the International Australian Studies Association, a Series Editor of the Journal of Australian Studies and a long-standing Trustee of the Lionel Murphy Foundation, a not for profit organisation awarding national and international scholarships to postgraduate students. Jenny Hocking has made several submissions to parliamentary inquiries, including the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee, regarding the development of Australia’s counter-terrorism laws and her public presentations, invited papers and key-note addresses to national and international conferences include the University of Waikato, New Zealand, the University of Newcastle and the Institute for Advanced Studies at the University of Western Australia.

Current project

Jenny Hocking is working on a two volume biographical study of the former Labor Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam, to be published by Melbourne University Press under its Miegunyah imprint. The biography draws on Jenny’s unprecedented access to archival material, interviews with family and colleagues and exclusive interviews with Gough Whitlam himself and examines Australian political and cultural developments in the twentieth century through the life of one of its most significant public figures.

The project is supported by an Australian Research Council Linkage Grant (2005-2008) with partner organizations the National Library of Australia and the National Archives of Australia. Volume I of Gough Whitlam: The Biography will be published in October 2008.

Research interests

Jenny Hocking was appointed Research Professor and Director of Research with the National Centre for Australian Studies in the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences, in 2007. Her PhD, from the Department of Government and Public Administration at the University of Sydney was in the field of Australia’s counter-terrorism developments.

Political biography

Jenny Hocking is the author of two political biographies, of the former Attorney-General and High Court justice Lionel Murphy, Lionel Murphy: A Political Biography (Cambridge University Press. 1997, 2000), and of the Australian communist, political activist and author Frank Hardy, Frank Hardy: Politics Literature Life (Lothian Books. 2005). Lionel Murphy: A Political Biography was short-listed for the South Australian Literature Awards for best non-fiction in 1997, Frank Hardy: Politics Literature Life was short-listed in the 2006 NSW History Awards. Jenny co-wrote the award-winning documentary film about Lionel Murphy, Mr Neal is Entitled to be an Agitator (Film Art Doco, ABC-TV 1991) and has been an academic advisor to several Australian documentary productions. She also co-edited with Associate Professor Colleen Lewis the 2003 volume It’s Time Again: Whitlam and Modern Labor.

Counter-terrorism, security and democracy

Jenny is a prolific writer and contributor to public debate on counter-terrorism and democracy, in her first book, Beyond Terrorism: the Development of the Australian Security State (Allen & Unwin. 1993) and Terror Laws: ASIO, Counter-terrorism and the Threat to Democracy (UNSW Press. 2004) as well as numerous book chapters, articles and opinion pieces. She has co-edited, also with Associate Professor Colleen Lewis, the international collection Counter-terrorism and the Post-Democratic State published by Edward Elgar in 2007. Jenny has made submissions to several parliamentary inquiries into these developments and is a frequent commentator in Australian and international media on these and other contemporary political issues.

Research grants

Professor Hocking has been the recipient of several competitive research grants including:

  • Australian Research Council Linkage Grant (three years)
  • Australian Research Council QEII Research Fellowship (five years)
  • Harold White Fellowship with the National Library of Australia.

Research supervision

Jenny Hocking is an experienced and dedicated supervisor of research students and this is one of her great interests. She takes great delight in seeing students develop their ideas and their research and establish a publication record. Her areas of supervision and expertise include:

  • Australian biography
  • Public sector broadcasting
  • Communications and media policy
  • Australian governance
  • Labour history
  • Counter-terrorism
  • Australian politics

Publications

BOOKS

2005 Frank Hardy: Politics Literature Life Lothian Books. Melbourne. 310pp

2004 Terror Laws: ASIO, Counter-terrorism and the Threat to Democracy University of New South Wales Press. Sydney.  288pp

2000 Lionel Murphy: A Political Biography Cambridge University Press. Melbourne. Paperback edition with new Foreword by Justice Michael Kirby and new Epilogue ‘Did Lionel Murphy really happen?’ by the author. 382pp

EDITED BOOKS

2007 Hocking, J. and Lewis, C. (eds) The Post-democratic Era: Counter-terrorism and the State Edward Elgar Publishing. London.

2003 Hocking, J. and Lewis, C. (eds) It’s Time Again: Whitlam and Modern Labor Circa Books. Melbourne.

BOOK CHAPTERS

2007 'Counter-terrorism and the politics of social cohesion' in Jupp, J., Nieuwenhuysen, J., Dawson, E. (eds.) Social Cohesion in Australia. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, :182-190

2007 with Lewis, C. ‘Counter-terrorism and the rise of “security policing”’ in Hocking, J. and Lewis, C. (eds) The Post-democratic Era: Counter-terrorism and the State Edward Elgar Publishing. London.

2007 ‘Academic Freedom in an Age of Terror’ in Turk, J. and Manson, A. (eds) Academic Freedom in Fearful Times James Lorimer Publishing. Canada.

2005a  ‘History by Numbers’ Introduction to Nolan, S. (ed) Reflections on the Dismissal Melbourne University Press. Melbourne. :1-14

2005b ‘Liberty, Security and the State’ in Saunders, P. and Walter, J. (eds) Ideas and Influence: Social Science and Public Policy in Australia University of New South Wales Press. Sydney. :178-197

2005c ‘Frank Hardy and Power Without Glory: Prelude to the Split’ in Love, P. and Strangio, P. The Great Labor Schism Scribe Publications. Melbourne. :97-113

ARTICLES

2007 ‘Post-war reconstruction and the new world order: the origins of Gough Whitlam's democratic citizen’ Australian Journal of Politics and History 53 (2) :223-235.

2005 ‘The Anti-Terrorism Bill (No 2) 2005: When scrutiny, secrecy and security collide’ Democratic Audit http://democratic.audit.anu.edu.au

2004a ‘Protecting democracy by preserving justice: ‘Even for the feared and the hated”’ University of New South Wales Law Journal 27(1) Thematic Issue: The Legal Response to Terrorism :319-338

2004b ‘The end of dissent: Counter terrorism and the politics of repression’ Arena Journal No. 22 September :11-19

REVIEWS AND COMMENTARY

2006 ‘Australian Terror Laws Target Ideas, Debate and Dissent’ Academic Matters: The Journal of Higher Education in Canada Fall :10-12

2004a ‘Power, Glory and Myth’ review of James Griffin John Wren: A Life Reconsidered Scribe Publications The Age 13 March

2004b ‘National Security and Democratic Rights: Australian Terror Laws’ The Sydney Papers Vol. 16 No. 1 Summer :89-95

2003 ‘Past Imperfect, Present Tense’ review of Stuart Macintyre and Anna Clark The History Wars Melbourne University Press The Age 30 August :4

Parliamentary and policy submissions

2006    Submission to the International Commission of Jurists Eminent Jurists Panel Terrorism, Counter-terrorism and Human Rights Sydney.

2005    Submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee inquiry into the Anti-Terrorism Bill (No 2) 2005

2002    Submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee inquiry into proposed ‘terrorism’ offences and Executive proscription powers

2002    Invited to give evidence in person before the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee, Melbourne hearings

2002    Submission to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on ASIO, ASIS and DSD inquiry into proposed detention powers for ASIO

 

NCAS

About the centre

Undergraduate program

Postgraduate program

Community engagement

Research

International engagement